The principal difference with Germany, as I see it, is that the Norwegian Young/Upper cohort is dramatically more “voelkisch” than the Middle-Aged/Upper. I cannot explain this. It does not fit the pattern seen in other European countries.

#1 — Youth-“Yes”-es skew lower-class once again (as in Germany and Poland).
#2 — Young/Lower, as in Germany, has the highest “Yes” rate of any combination.
#3 –In Norway, “Yes” skews noticeably lower-class in all age cohorts, which was not true in Poland or Germany.
#4 — Note that both Norway and Thailand (the other country analyzed today) continue to uphold the pattern found among Oriental vs. European youth: “Voelkisch” attitudes tend to skew upper-class among Oriental youth, while they skew lower-class among European youth. [See South-Korea and China].

QUESTION
Why have Norwegian “upper-class” youth (the top-third in social-class, born after 1977) gotten more “voelkisch” than their immediate elders?

I’d like to learn to what extent the above hypothesis is true. After some searching, I cannot find any ‘vote by age’ data for the 2009 Norwegian election. (I do not read Norwegian, which hampers that effort). If anyone else knows where to find this data, please post it here.